Apache Industrial Painting v. Gulf Copper & Manufacturing Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 2010
Docket01-08-00812-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Apache Industrial Painting v. Gulf Copper & Manufacturing Corporation (Apache Industrial Painting v. Gulf Copper & Manufacturing Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apache Industrial Painting v. Gulf Copper & Manufacturing Corporation, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 22, 2010.



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

________________

NO. 01-08-00812-CV

APACHE INDUSTRIAL PAINTING, Appellant

 v.

GULF COPPER & MANUFACTURING CORPORATION, Appellee


On Appeal from the 212th District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 06CV1063A


MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Apache Industrial Painting (“Apache”), brings this appeal to complain of the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of Gulf Copper & Manufacturing Corporation (“Gulf”).  Apache complains that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in Gulf’s favor because the Master Services Agreement signed between Apache and Nabors Drilling USA (“Nabors”) (the “Apache/Nabors MSA”) does not require Apache to indemnify Gulf.  Instead, Apache contends the MSA Gulf signed with Nabors (the “Nabors/Gulf MSA”) requires Gulf to indemnify Apache.  Apache asks that we reverse the trial court’s rendering summary judgment in favor of Gulf and render judgment in its favor.  

We reverse the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of Gulf and render partial judgment in favor of Apache, holding that neither Apache nor Gulf is entitled to indemnity from the other.  

BACKGROUND

Apache and Gulf were both subcontractors performing repairs on a jack-up drilling rig owned by Nabors Drilling USA while the rig was in Gulf’s shipyard.  This appeal arises out of a personal injury lawsuit filed by an employee of Apache, Steve Brokmann, against Nabors and Gulf.  Brokmann’s lawsuit alleged that both Nabors and Gulf were negligent. 

Nabors and Gulf filed cross-claims for indemnity against Apache, based on the MSAs Apache and Gulf signed with Nabors.  In its cross-claim against Apache, Gulf alleged that the Apache/Nabors MSA requires that Apache assume the defense and indemnity of Gulf in the Brokmann lawsuit.  In the alternative, Gulf alleged that other agreements between Apache and Nabors require Apache to indemnify Gulf.  Gulf therefore sought a declaration as to the required indemnity and brought a breach of contract claim against Apache based upon its failure to indemnify and defend Gulf and its failure to name Gulf as an additional insured on its insurance policies.

Apache answered Gulf’s cross-claim by generally denying the allegations and asserting that the accident was caused solely by an employee of Gulf.  Apache also argued that the Apache/Nabors MSA was superseded by other agreements between Apache and Nabors, and that the indemnity obligations in the Apache/Nabors MSA were not sufficiently conspicuous.  In addition, Apache counterclaimed against Gulf, asserting that, if Apache was required to indemnify Nabors, Gulf was then required to indemnify Apache under the terms of the Gulf/Nabors MSA.  Apache sought a declaration that it was not required to indemnify either Nabors or Gulf, or alternatively, that Gulf was obliged to indemnify Apache for any sums it paid Nabors.  Apache also sought its attorney’s fees.

Nabors and Gulf filed a motion for summary judgment on their claims against Apache.  The joint motion sought summary judgment on their claims against Apache for breach of contract based upon Apache’s failure to provide indemnity and defense for Nabors and Gulf in the underlying personal injury lawsuit.  Additionally, Nabors and Gulf alleged that Apache committed a breach of contract by failing to procure insurance covering the claims at issue and by failing to list Nabors and Gulf as additional insured on such a policy. 

Apache filed cross-motions for summary judgment on its contention that it was not required to indemnify either Gulf or Nabors, and sought summary judgment in its favor on its indemnity claim against Gulf.  Gulf’s reply to Apache’s cross-motions for summary judgment asserted that the trial court should render judgment in Gulf’s favor because Apache was not entitled to indemnity under the Gulf/Nabors MSA.

The trial court granted Nabors’ and Gulf’s joint motion for summary judgment against Apache and denied Apache’s motions for summary judgment against Gulf and Nabors.  The trial court also ordered Apache to pay the attorney’s fees incurred by Nabors and Gulf in the indemnity lawsuit and the costs of the settlements they reached in the Brokmann lawsuit.

This appeal followed.  Apache originally appealed the summary judgment in favor of Nabors as well as that in favor of Gulf, but it subsequently settled with Nabors.  Accordingly, Apache and Nabors sought to dismiss those claims from this appeal, sever the portion of the appeal against Nabors and remand it to the trial court for entry of a final judgment in accordance with the settlement.  That relief was granted on November 13, 2009.  This opinion is therefore limited to the resolution of Apache’s remaining issues on appeal as they relate to the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of Gulf. 

ANALYSIS

On appeal, Apache complains that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of Gulf and by not granting Apache’s motion for summary judgment against Gulf.  Although Apache raises four issues, these can be distilled down to two contentions: (1) the court erred by granting summary judgment on Gulf’s claims against Apache because Gulf 

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Apache Industrial Painting v. Gulf Copper & Manufacturing Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apache-industrial-painting-v-gulf-copper-manufactu-texapp-2010.